I would agree that the young fish you posted are forskahlii. I feel its important to point out that they all have the colored lower lobe with at most only a little color on the upper lobe. I would consider all of those to be consistent with the description I wrote for fatf.
However, the adult you posted is troubling me. I agree the body form certainly looks like a forskahlii, but at the same time I can't find any evidence anywhere else to support the hypothesis that forskahlii has a fully colored, vittatus like upper lobe like the one that fish has. Every fish I've managed to find that has a fully colored tail like that has been a vittatus from southern waters. The northern fishes, brevis and forskahlii, I can't find with a fully colored tail.
I feel both of those fish (both forskahlii from the Nile) fairly closely match the one you've posted, with the exception of their tails only having color on the bottom lobe. One way or the other, the fish you've found is an exceptional specimen. Either its an exceptionally thin vittatus, or its an exceptionally well colored forskahlii. Either way, I don't feel its an ideal representation of either species.
However, the adult you posted is troubling me. I agree the body form certainly looks like a forskahlii, but at the same time I can't find any evidence anywhere else to support the hypothesis that forskahlii has a fully colored, vittatus like upper lobe like the one that fish has. Every fish I've managed to find that has a fully colored tail like that has been a vittatus from southern waters. The northern fishes, brevis and forskahlii, I can't find with a fully colored tail.
I feel both of those fish (both forskahlii from the Nile) fairly closely match the one you've posted, with the exception of their tails only having color on the bottom lobe. One way or the other, the fish you've found is an exceptional specimen. Either its an exceptionally thin vittatus, or its an exceptionally well colored forskahlii. Either way, I don't feel its an ideal representation of either species.